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More than relationship: Chinese interaction and the principle of kuan‐hsi
- Hui‐Ching Chang, G. Holt
- Psychology
- 1 June 1991
Through an interpretive analysis of interviews of Chinese in Taiwan, it is demonstrated that the principle of kuan‐hsi (relations) undergirds the functional aspects of Chinese interpersonal…
Harmony as Performance: The Turbulence Under Chinese Interpersonal Communication
- Hui‐Ching Chang
- Sociology
- 1 May 2001
This article explores how `social harmony' as cultural performance, is conducted by Chinese in their conversation at the surface level, with turbulence and manipulation concealed beneath superficial…
The ‘well-defined’ is ‘ambiguous’ — Indeterminacy in Chinese conversation
- Hui‐Ching Chang
- Sociology
- 1 April 1999
Taiwan and ROC: A critical analysis of President Chen Shui-bien's construction of Taiwan identity in national speeches
- Hui‐Ching Chang, Richard Holt
- Sociology
- 6 August 2009
Names used to address Taiwan – such as taiwan and zhonghuamingguo (Republic of China [ROC]) – are symbols defining Taiwan's political realities, each with their own unique historical significance.…
Tourism as consciousness of struggle: Cultural representations of Taiwan
- Hui‐Ching Chang, G. Holt
- Art
- 1 March 1991
This study examines depictions of Taiwan in a variety of discourses about tourism. Taiwan's depictions tend to one side or the other of the traditional‐modern continuum and are undergirded by…
Making sense of three-way conversations: A qualitative study of cross-cultural counseling with refugee men
- Mansha Mirza, E. Harrison, Hui‐Ching Chang, Corrina D Salo, D. Birman
- Psychology
- 2017
Community perspectives on substance use among Bhutanese and Iraqi refugees resettled in the United States
- Mansha Mirza, E. Harrison, Hui‐Ching Chang, Corrina D Salo, D. Birman
- PsychologyJournal of prevention & intervention in the…
- 2 January 2018
TLDR
Language and Words
- Hui‐Ching Chang
- Education
- 1 June 1997
Despite attention to effects of Confucianism on Asian communication, views of Confucian philosophy are hampered by predilection to look at its social implications rather than Confucius's many…
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